I can't tell if you're patronizing me or not. I guess I deserve the uncertainty due to the manner in which I made several posts over the course of the last year.
I was being serious.
I can't tell if you're patronizing me or not. I guess I deserve the uncertainty due to the manner in which I made several posts over the course of the last year.
This is moot. The chief had ZERO to do with Brown's death. Repeat, ZERO.
This is moot. The chief had ZERO to do with Brown's death. Repeat, ZERO. Sucks that a guy who worked his whole life to earn such a position has it snatched away from him because some **** head decided to rob a store, threaten a cop, charge the cop, and then take a bullet in the face.
Clearly the chiefs fault, and he should have stepped down months ago. That racist pig.
The chief is in the best position to set and change the culture of a department. If you think Wilson was some rogue cop, your position makes sense. If you think Wilson was perhaps on the slightly extreme end of a police culture that was more about domination than service, then the chief bears some responsibility. Seeing how the police behaved when the protests started, I'm going with the latter.
Cops had no problem apprehending this white woman who charged them with knife: https://vine.co/v/OmWerMBUuue
yet Wilson had to shoot unarmed Brown 10 times to his death. Wilson belonged to a force with documented history of abusive powers and the way they handled the protests exposed them for what they were for the whole world to see. Obviously the world took notice.
Luckily, backwards racist POS' like yourself are going the way of dinosaurs.
Unfortunately, though, society will have to wait another generation to be totally rid of you folk as I'm sure you and your ilk have already begun indoctrinating your tainted spawn with your racist and prejudice filth. Society is too progressive nowadays for them to be as misguided as you, so they'll probably just end up as 'closeted racists' due to being brainwashed at an early age.
No, he wasn't a rogue cop. He did what he had to do. The chief is nothing more than a scapegoat in this story to keep the mindless buffoons like HighlandHomie feeling like they're winning. Nothing will change in Furguson just because they fired the chief. Repeat, nothing.
There are a few things that stand out here, that obviously, you missed. Let me be your path to reason and intellectual honesty.
1) From the link you posted, we have no idea what the circumstances of that video are. Therefore, comparing the two, or in your case, using it as some sort of "see, I told you I was right" really makes you look stupider than usual; an enormous feat.
2) For the sake of argument though, let's just assume the situation is similar to the Brown case.
2b) Brown is a giant man.
2c) She is a small woman.
3) The officer was alone in the Brown case.
3b) There were multiple officers in your video.
4) Again, not knowing the facts about the video you posted leaves a lot to be contemplated: where in the country did it happen? Did they know that lady just robbed a convenience store? Was she walking down the middle of the road, taunting the officers before this happened? So on, so forth, etc., amen.
Every time someone says "unarmed" regarding this story, a fairy dies. This "unarmed" man successfully robbed a convenience store with nothing but his looks, size, arms and hands. Forget the fact that he takes dumps bigger than most people are tall, but he is/was bigger than 98% of the people you'll ever meet. Size matters.
Struck by a meteorite, resulting in a slow, steady decline of species, thus altering weather patterns, growing cycles, and life as we know it?
Says the guy who does nothing but regurgitate whatever scare tactic the media is buffeting on this week. Feel free to have an original thought one of these days, bro, it's invigorating.
No, he wasn't a rogue cop. He did what he had to do.
Nothing will change in Furguson just because they fired the chief. Repeat, nothing.
4) Again, not knowing the facts about the video you posted leaves a lot to be contemplated: where in the country did it happen? Did they know that lady just robbed a convenience store? Was she walking down the middle of the road, taunting the officers before this happened? So on, so forth, etc., amen.
Size matters.
A police officer never has to shoot an unarmed man who is standing with his hands over his head.
That would be very sad, indeed.
Which of these justifies shooting a person, and if none of them do, why is this relevant?
Agreed. Surrender matters, also.
It would be. I'm not saying that I want nothing to change, btw, just in case I'm not clear. Will you agree that the firing of the chief was largely because they had to do "something"?
If you read the back and forth between dickless and me, you'll see that I'm not claiming any justification for any shooting, and that in the context of our discussion, what I wrote is relevant.
Just as long as that is really what happened, which of course in this case, didn't.
Hypothetically, how many witnesses would need to say that Brown surrendered before you actually believe it happened?
t would be. I'm not saying that I want nothing to change, btw, just in case I'm not clear. Will you agree that the firing of the chief was largely because they had to do "something"?
BS!!! That's exactly what you want. You want nothing to change. [EDITED - SEE ABOVE]
He's brainwashed in ...
Hypothetically, how many witnesses would need to say that Brown surrendered before you actually believe it happened?
But a forensics expert says Brown’s official county autopsy suggests the teenager may not have had his hands raised after all when he was slain on Aug. 9, according to a story in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Judy Melinek, a forensic pathologist in San Francisco who reviewed the autopsy for the Post-Dispatch, told the paper that one of the officer’s shots hit Brown’s forearm and traveled from the back of the arm to the inner arm, which means Brown’s palms could not have been facing Wilson, as some witnesses have said. That trajectory shows Brown probably was not taking a standard surrender position with arms above the shoulders and palms out when he was shot outside the officer’s car, she said.
Neither the St. Louis County medical examiner or her assistant, who conducted the autopsy, was reached for comment by the paper.
Melinek also told the newspaper another bullet struck Brown at close range — and may at that point have been reaching for Wilson’s weapon. The autopsy found material “consistent with products that are discharged from the barrel of a firearm” in a wound on Brown’s thumb. Melinek said this “supports the fact that this guy is reaching for the gun, if he has gunpowder particulate material in the wound.”
Maybe some that are consistent with the autopsy report.
Baden echoed Melinek and said both autopsies show Brown's right forearm was in an upward position and the teen's back was to the officer when he was shot. Brown was also shot several times while facing the officer.
You mean, this particular expert's interpretation of that report, and the path of one of the bullets? That alone means the witnesses are lying, how?
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...athologist-questions-leaked-autopsy/18154107/
Apparently, it means they are not lying at all.
But on the crucial moments that followed, the accounts differ sharply, officials say. Some witnesses say that Mr. Brown, 18, moved toward Officer Wilson, possibly in a threatening manner, when the officer shot him dead. But others say that Mr. Brown was not moving and may even have had his hands up when he was killed.
Some of the physical evidence — including blood spatter analysis, shell casings and ballistics tests — also supports Wilson’s account of the shooting, the Post sources said, which cast Brown as an aggressor who threatened the officer’s life.
Or it could mean that people who were watching an emotionally charged event unfold were unsure what they were seeing, and that it happened so fast some of them were mistaken. Wrong is different than lying, and perspectives differ, making it hard to piece together what really happened.
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/20/us/shooting-accounts-differ-as-holder-schedules-visit.html?_r=0
So which witnesses were lying and which telling the truth? Or, maybe better put, which were wrong and which were right?
https://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2014/10/michael-brown-autopsy-shows-close-range-shot.html
Who is right and who is wrong?
Who is right and who is wrong?
Again, go back to the autopsy. One bullet that went through the arm is consistent with being shot from behind or while the gun was being grabbed in the car, but there are three other shots to that same arm, all consistent with the arm being raised.
Which is believable: that a witness was mistook the stopping and turning for a reverse movement, or that Brown was running with two arms over his head?